A Feast for the Eyes: Food Photography for Bloggers, Part One

A tea party table from <a href="http://thepatternedplate.wordpress.com/2013/05/20/a-fanciful-tea-party/">The Patterned Plate</a>.

Food photos are in the running to oust cat photos as internet darlings. Whether you write a recipe blog, post about Aunt Mary’s yearly Thanksgiving extravaganza, or like to share sculptural restaurants dishes on Instagram, lots of you are publishing food photos.

Food isn’t quite the same as people or landscapes — it’s easy to make a beautiful panorama look good; less so a bowl of beef stew. Edible subjects have nuances of color and texture, and food styling adds another artistic layer. To help everyone take photos to rival Bon AppetitThe Daily Post grilled six of WordPress.com’s most popular foodies on camera gear, lighting tips, styling, and more.

Say hello to our sweet, savory, and skilled shutterbugs:

Today, we’re sharing their lessons on getting great shots with any camera, shot selection, and the most fun and challenging foods to shoot.  (In Part 2, we’ll focus on props and styling.)

Natural light helps you get the most beautiful food photos, whether you’re using a point-and-shoot, dSLR, or cameraphone.

Bitter gourd in tamarind gravy, Just Homemade.

Bitter gourd in tamarind gravy, Just Homemade.

Kate: I prefer to use natural light as much as possible, as this gives the best results when shooting food. My shoot set-ups are often on the move as I try out different locations to find the best light.

Paola: Look for natural, indirect light. Shoot near a bright window but not a sunny one — direct sun will blow an image out and create harsh shadows.

There are also some amazing photography apps out there. VSCO is my favorite for adding filters and doing quick color corrections, and I like Squaready for cropping images to share on social media and Diptic for making collages.

Theresa: Good lighting makes all the difference. First, turn off the flash. (Once, I even went as far as to duct tape over a flash I couldn’t disable!) You want natural, diffused light.

Using natural light prevents harsh shadows and weird color casts on food you can get from incandescent or fluorescent lights. (Color casts from interior lighting show up especially prominently in cameraphone photos.) If you can’t avoid indoor lighting, use some of the great photography apps out there to make adjustments — my favorites are Snapseed and Afterlight. Also, don’t go overboard with the filters! When it comes to food, weird colors can be very unappetizing.

Get creative with angles for food photos that stand out from the crowd.

Kate: Don’t be afraid to experiment with different angles. Have fun with it, don’t try and be too fancy! Simple is best.

Pimms Tartlets, Finger, Fork & Knife.

Pimms Tartlets, Finger, Fork & Knife.

Theresa: Try a variety of angles and framing. It’s easier to do with a small, portable camera and with digital photos, there’s no limit on how many photos you can develop, so experimenting is low-cost.

Some point-and-shoots give you the ability to adjust the aperture, so if you can, experiment with different apertures too. Avoid “digital zoom” on point-and-shoots and camera phones — it yields pixelated photos. Just get close to your subject.

Radhika: Perspective makes a picture beautiful. When taking a picture, take a minute to think about what you wish capture in the frame. Is it just the clouds, or the view of the tree and clouds together?

Stewart: The traditional “from the top” angle of food photography can be hard without specific light, equipment and/or settings. Top-down photos are also common, so it’s hard to stand out. Close-up, lower angles are easier with basic equipment, more forgiving and (we think) more appetizing. You can take some great shots with an iPhone or “snappy” camera at low angles.

You can use a point-and-shoot or cameraphone, and trade up if you get the photography bug.

Kate: I started Finger, Fork & Knife using a Panasonic Lumix. It was a great camera but didn’t offer me the control that an SLR  could offer me.

When deciding which camera to replace the Lumix with I looked for a camera that had an 18 megapixel processor (at least), good low-light performance, was light, and durable.

Paola: Some of my favorite photos have been taken with my iPhone.

Carrie: I started with a Fujifilm Coolpix. It was a great little camera to get started with the foundations of photography. I traded up after I worked the Fujifilm to death, using all the options available and feeling frustrated by its limitations.

I chose my camera because it sat naturally in my hands. I wanted it to be comfortable to manipulate, with a good grip and easy to reach buttons.

Stewart: We started with a Nikon dSLR and a 18-55mm lens, and an iPhone. The big “trade up” was a good Macro lens — we use it for a majority of our photos.

Theresa: If you think you might be ready to upgrade, go to a store and try out different cameras and lenses. If you don’t have a store nearby, there are websites that rent both camera bodies and lenses for very reasonable prices. No one else will be able to tell you what gear YOU will be most comfortable with.

It can take a lot of shots to get five perfect pictures for a blog post. (Thank goodness for digital cameras!)

Cauliflower crust pizza, Love + Cupcakes.

Cauliflower crust pizza, Love + Cupcakes.

Theresa: I’ll take anywhere from 12 to 60 photos for a blog post. Some dishes look great right away and I’ll have six or more great shots to choose from out of maybe 25 for the final post.

With other recipes, I struggle to get the styling just right, so I’ll take 50 or 60 photos with various props and compositions, and only get one or two I like enough for the final post.

Paola: For a single post, I take anywhere from 150-300 photos, and edit that down to three to six for the final post. I follow the rule that more is better — it gives you options and ensures that you have at least one usable image. And since most of us use a digital camera, there’s no waste.

Carrie:  It used to be near on 100! It’s starting to slowly come down and the last post must have been around 30 shots to get an average of three to five for one post.

Radhika: Anywhere from twenty to eighty. Sometimes if I get lucky, as few as ten and other times, over a hundred if I am shooting several ingredients, techniques and couple of different themes.  Finally, about four to six pictures make it on the blog.

Stewart: We take a lot of images, usually 80-120 images per post, depending on the steps, ingredients and available light.  We first prune out images based on focus, then light, then composition. We then pick eight to twelve images for post-processing.

La Baur au Lac cocktail, Putney Farms.

La Baur au Lac cocktail, Putney Farms.

Bloggers use everything from iPhoto to Photoshop to tweak their photos — but do it sparingly.

Theresa: My goal is to get as much of the shot perfect in the camera as I can, so that my post-processing is just some quick adjustments to contrast, white balance, and curves or levels.

Post-processing is my least favorite part of photography, so I try to make it as painless as possible! All of my post-processing is done with Adobe Bridge and Photoshop CS4.

Carrie: I’d say the post-editing is as important as taking the photo in the best conditions, but cropping, tweaking, and saturation can all serve to enhance the original. There’s a limit to how far I can go so that I don’t misrepresent the final result. If a lemon bar wasn’t actually neon yellow, saturation levels are reduced accordingly! I post edit my photos primarily with Adobe Photoshop.

Stewart:  Software-wise, we just use iPhoto. Post-processing for us is mostly cropping images, with some work on saturation and contrast; we do very little editing. We will sometimes play with the color on cocktails, but we try to make our cooking photos as close to real-life as possible.

Colorful foods with height are fun to photograph…

A tea party table from The Patterned Plate.

A tea party table from The Patterned Plate.

Theresa: Fresh fruits and vegetables! They’re so colorful and naturally beautiful, it makes my job as a photographer easy. Melted chocolate, caramel, and cheese are fun to photograph too because they’re all so enticing!

Paola: Foods that stack high always photograph well — cookies, pancakes, and waffles.

Carrie: Cake! It’s always pretty, has height and the only job I have is to capture that.

Stewart: Seafood, particularly shellfish, is always fun to photograph, — so many shapes, colors and presentations (plus we love to eat the dishes). Cocktails are also fun, because the colors, glassware and garnishes give you endless variations to play with.

…but brown foods and things that melt are tougher.

Kate: Challenging? Anything in a glass.

Ginger-Mango Ice Cream Sandwiches, The Craving Chronicles. Great shots of frozen foods *are* doable!

Ginger-Mango Ice Cream Sandwiches, The Craving Chronicles. (Great shots of frozen foods *are* doable!)

Theresa: Frozen foods stress me out! It’s tough to get the shot before everything melts into a puddly mess. Brown foods are tough too, because they tend to look boring in a photo. And soups! It can be hard to highlight all of the good ingredients in a soup.

Paola: Foods that melt are the most challenging. Ice cream and popsicles are the hardest to shoot since the process is so time sensitive. I do a lot of running back and forth to the freezer between shots.

Radhika: Some of the brown Indian curries are a challenge, especially when the dish is not normally garnished and has little texture.

Stewart: Biscuits, scones, and basic cookies are very hard — they are somewhat monochromatic, most often brown. We garnish with lots of fruits, mint, butter, and jam to get colors and textures into these photos. Oven shots also bring things to life.

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Garnishing less-photogenic foods is one easy way to bring color and contrast to a photos, but our pros have other tips and tricks any home cook can use to create a blog-worthy spread. In Part Two, we’ll dive into props and styling.

Do you have any food photography secrets, or questions for our pros?

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